Friday, September 28, 2012



ReadWriteThink, is  created by the International Reading Association and the National Council of Teachers of English,  and provides instructional practices and digital resources that support effective reading and language arts instruction for all learners

This site is very useful to teachers

I found  the Point of View Lesson Plans. Students will learn in these lessons  that characters in stories have different points of view. Learning this will help students to better comprehend the text and appreciate literature.

Point of View is  the importance of the character’s role in telling the story

Before we read the story the teacher would talk  about point of view with the class. People or animals in the story are the characters. Think about the characters in the story . The narrator is the one who tells the story The point of view is the way the author allows the reader to see and hear what is going on .The person telling this story is in the story.

 This site is a great resource for lesson plans.  Point of View is a popular topic and is part of the common core curriculum.

These were the two lesson plans I found on this web site.  These lesson plans are not activities but true lesson plans with Objectives and Goals and Instruction and Resources. I love this site and would recommend it to colleagues.

             Henry, L. (n.d.). The Big Bad Wolf: Analyzing Point of View in Texts. - ReadWriteThink. Retrieved from http://www.readwritethink.org/resources/resource-print.html?id=23

Morris, S. (n.d.). Teaching point of view with two bad ants. - ReadWriteThink. Retrieved , from http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/lesson-plans/teaching-point-view-with-789.html
http://www.thinkfinity.org/bookmarks/12759
I went on this site that is a project  of the Verizon foundation. At first I was not finding much but than I  learned the Smithsonian Institute  has posted exhibits on the site as lesson plans.  I visited a lesson, All the President's Children and found it very interesting. One had to match the children's faces to the descriptions of the children of the presidents . I also enjoyed reading the letters that children wrote to the Presidents

Julia Child's Kitchen at the Smithsonian  is on this site. Julia Child  actually talks about donating her kitchen to the museum . You can learn all about her life and food.  Children would enjoy looking at the kitchen.

This site contains historical gems. I love this kind of information. I even saw Abraham Lincoln's top hat.

I was impressed with the site and  would never think that the Smithsonian Institution's exhibits would be found  on this site.

Children would find this site 's lessons very interesting. I think they would see that history can be engaging.  The Smithsonian information is  buried on the site and  I am glad I found it.
History classes would find this site useful.
puzzlemaker

http://www.discoveryeducation.com/free-puzzlemaker/?CFID=740857&CFTOKEN=91912841

 
Assessment

D A S F N F A R J N N C X V D

D X F E O A F X F O R I L R E

R W P E R C E N T I L E P T V

A E O C M O O Z T T L A N K I

D K F I S R C E S A A E M U A

N S T E D U R S W L M K F R T

A O M I R I J E S E R R E T I

T Z N V O E C K V R O D U O O

S A E N M N N E T R N P N S N

L C L R A A I C V O P D A I H

D D O I R H H S E C N F E S S

A N R R C S D R A D N A T S W

P A O A E H S T A N I N E S U

V W V M U I D E M E D O M M S

D R A N G E G X C I V W I O R

 

ACHIEVEMENT

CORRELATION

CRITERION

CURVE

DEVIATION

KURTOSIS

MEAN

MEDIUM

MODE

NORM

NORMAL

NORMS

ORDINAL

PERCENTILE

RANGE

RANKS

REFERENCED

SCORE

SCORES

SKEW

STANDARD

STANDARDS

STANINES

VARIANCE

I made this word search with my assessment vocabulary. This puzzlemaker site is very interesting.  It can generate puzzles, word games, math puzzles and more

This is a very friendly tool. I think this woul be great for grade 3 on.  This tool can be integrated into the classroom. It is a great lesson plan   for a substitute teacher before vacations or at the end of the school year.  The fact that you can print out the answer is nice. I copied the word search that I made and it was very easy to do.   Students can learn  vocabulary lessons in any class with these word searches.  Students can even make their own word searches or puzzles and swop them with their friends worksheets.   I would use this in the classroom. I think this website will increase achievement.
 
I made a wordle from words that I defined in my assessment class. The wordle came out great. I saved the wordle and then found it and copied the tags. I then made a second wordle and did a print screen and then saved it to paint. Personally I find saving the wordles labor intensive and not intuitive.

I think that classes would love wordles for spelling words. The wordle would be great practice. Also for any class that has definitions. This could increase student interest in defining terms. The students would learn html tags and the paint accessory .

I do find that saving the wordle is labor intensive and would like to find out an easier way to save the wordle. Children would enjoy creating wordles in any discipline.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

First Post

I have had a very limited experience with blogs and wiki's. I did set up a wiki for scheduling library instruction at Newfound Regional HS. It was a pb works wiki. When the district went to  using google sites we gravitated to google calendar and did not use the wiki.  The wiki could have been used for library assignments but teachers did not use it. It was great for scheduling.

Blogs have only one author and are not interactive.  They are useful for news. Blogs  can be useful for classrooms. Wiki's are interactive. Blogs are a wonderful tool to inform the class about websites and  review web 2.0 tools.

A Wiki would be useful for a librarian who needs to post links to databases and websites and library catalogs.
Teachers could use a wiki for homework assignments.
I have used  Nancy Keane's podcasts . Ms. Keane  is a middle school librarian in Concord who has fantastic podcasts for young adult literature. I just found a great series of podcasts entitled Cliff Notes Cram Casts that would be useful for students and special education teachers. There are times when students need to review the book they have read or need an alternative to  differentiate  instruction.

All of these web 2.0 tools encourage active teaching.